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ssigning another to the command he had abandoned could not be sent through him (General Beauregard), when he had departed and gone to a place where there was no telegraph and rarely a mail, is, indeed, extraordinary, to say the least of it. Mobile was not an inaccessible place, nor was Bladon Springs an unknown locality. General Bragg found no difficulty in notifying General Beauregard of the order superseding him; and the curt, unceremonious, official note of Mr. Randolph, dated Richmond, June 23d, also reached General Beauregard without difficulty or delay. IV. If, as Mr. Davis has it, General Beauregard had abandoned his command without permission—that is to say, in violation of army regulations—he was not absent on sick-leave, or any other leave; he had simply deserted his post. If, on the other hand, as Mr. Davis plainly states, he was on sick-leave, the temporary arrangement made at and before his departure should have been acquiesced in; for he was clearly not at fault, if
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